[Please include my email address in replies]
Hi Angelo,
Thanks for the quick reply.
I just recently did away with my FAT32 "transfer" partition. Your
system should be able to READ the NTFS filesystem fine. That allows you
to pull files over, and then just delete them the next time you boot to
windows. Supposedly deleting files is safe too (but not modifying or
writing files), but that's only if you want to mount the NTFS partition
in read-write mode, and it's safer not to. I think the way it works, is
it marks the files somehow on the NTFS partition, and then Windows
deletes them the next time it gets booted. (Maybe it runs chkdsk and
gets rid of them?)
Sounds good, but sometimes I need to transfer big files from
debian->Win2K, but that means it might corrupt if things aren't quite
right just yet..
So I guess if I still need to copy data onto win2k partitions I had
better stick with the FAT32 partition, but then that limits me to 2GB
per file still :(
For the other direction there is explore2fs which works about the same
way. It gives you a somewhat "ftp-like" interface to download files
from your ext2/ext3 file system into windows. It doesn't allow you to
delete or modify the ext2/ext3 partition. Then the next time you boot
Linux you can remove those files if you want.
http://uranus.it.swin.edu.au/~jn/linux/explore2fs.htm
Looks good, I'll have to give that a try.
Kind regards
JG
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